Episode seven takes a further step beyond the initial premise
to tell something of a time travel tale centred around Lilia. Her powers of
premonition prove vital to solving the next trail which takes place inside a
suitably gothic mansion. Agatha and Billy - with temporal interjections from Lilia and Jennifer
- have a limited time to complete a game
of tarot and there are literal swords hanging over their heads one of which
drops each time there is an error. Presented with Lilia and Jennifer’s scenes
popping back and forth incorporating flashbacks to previous episodes show how
deeply plotted the show has been. We also see Lilia as a child learning the
skills that will now help her win the game albeit at a cost.
Patti Le Pone has been something of a calmer presence amidst her more raucous cast mates and she takes on this episode with consummate skill making us feel for her and intrigued with her story. Her experience shows up in key moments and once it becomes clear where this is leading for her character then it becomes more serious. She works so well with Sasheer Zamata’s Jennifer, their banter in the tunnels providing the lighter side of the situation. It’s a low-key episode of Agatha herself though all four of the ladies are fitted out in fairytale costumes inspired by the likes of Wicked and Malificent.
The teen may well have been deceitful but the real surprise
of the episode is the reveal that the currently absent Rio is in fact Death.
I’m not sure if Agatha’s expression means she has always been aware of this. If
you are having a relationship with someone it’s probably a fact that needs establishing.
There is such a lineage in this type of story and in
presentation it closely resembles (and may indeed have been inspired by) Steven
Moffat’s’ knottier “timey wimey” episodes of Doctor Who. It’s given similar
imagery especially what we presume is Lilia’s final scene as she falls in slow motion
to operatic incidental music. Naturally such a plot means that the writers
don’t need to explain how Lilia and Jennifer survived their muddy incarceration
at the end of episode five, they just did.
Its traditional in fantasy generally – and with Marvel in
particular- that however unconventionally a story begins it will end up with
spectacle and big clashes. While there is a little of that, Agatha All Along
largely eschews a noisy climax for something cleverer and more considered. The
trials end in part eight amidst a more spartan environment that enables a least
one of the party- Jenny- to have a happy ending.
That episode nine is the most unusual of the whole series
says a lot about the show’s ambition. The last two episodes, released together,
provide a mystical, thoughtful conclusion to what has been a winding, twisting
road of a journey. I do reckon that the content might have been better as an
extended single episode lasting around an hour, as it is part nine seeks to
drill down on plot points we’ve already seen. Yet it does possess a poised
grandeur and some moving moments though they are always counterpointed by
Agatha’s behaviour. On the one hand the story asks us to sympathise over the
premature loss of her son yet at the same time she has taken many lives
herself. Then again Kathryn Hahn plays all of this so wonderfully that you are
as easily forced to empathise just as all those witches Agatha has tricked fell
for her charm.
Whilst the Witches Road song is used frequently here and to good effect, the biggest reveal is that the Witches Road itself was something made up by Agatha centuries ago to lure those witches and was only brought into existence by Billy, who outlined his fanboy credentials in the first episode so maybe we shouldn’t be too shocked. His bedroom s full of visual signatures relating to the different scenarios we have seen. The bond between Agatha and the character formerly known as Teen has been at the heart of the series and now we know why she liked him as he reminded her of her son. Both Kathryn Hahn and Joe Locke have been excellent throughout; both versatile and unpredictable and enabling even the oddest scenes with humanity
Agatha All Along has certainly restored an artistic credibility to Marvel that recent films have been criticised for losing. It is never predictable, often bold, frequently amusing and visually interesting. More than anything though it has been an ideal playground for the versatile skills of Kathryn Hahn who gives one of the performances of the year.
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